19 January 2015

Like the communists of today,
Niccolò Machiavelli cultivated
“long experience in contemporary affairs and a continual study of antiquity”.
Both Machiavelli and Marx were familiar with the politics of ancient Greece and
Rome, as well as in “contemporary affairs”.

Machiavelli’s “Prince” was
written over 500 years ago, in Florence, Italy, and published in 1512.
According to Karl Marx, the sixteenth century (1501-1600) was when capitalism
first arose on the earth, especially in the Netherlands and in England, but it
was Italy that had the most developed political culture at that time.

Hence “The Prince”
appeared much earlier than the first writings on Political Economy such as
those by Thomas Hobbes, William Petty and Nicholas Barbon, which appeared
between 1650 and 1700. Karl Marx was familiar with all of these, and
Machiavelli’s work in particular has been foundational for politicians and for
political thought during the five centuries of its existence.

Machiavelliwas needing employment when he wrote this
user-friendly text for the 20-year-old Florentine prince Lorenzo di Piero De’ Medici(pictured above), in the
hope that the young man would give Machiavelli a job as a consultant, consigliero, or something of that sort.
No job resulted for Machiavelli, but what he left us as a result of this
attempt was a set of “short texts” of very frank and still-useful political
education, not very different in conception from a Communist University “Generic Course”.

The chapter, in the attached
selection of four, that corresponds most closely to the politics of today is Chapter
IX, “Concerning a Civil Principality”. All of them are very interesting
and all contain advice that is still good after 500 years. Our discussion
should be about this advice. If people have not read the material in advance,
one chapter could be selected and read out loud. The chapters are very short,
but powerful.

Machiavelli had a good basic
understanding of class politics, which is perhaps why his works were put on the
Pope’s Index Librorum Prohibitorum
(Index of Forbidden Books) not long after his death – thereby quickly
guaranteeing their eternal fame.